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Hedgehog anti-submarine weapon, British WWII
Hedgehog anti-submarine mortar with full load of practice bombs, circa 2002.The Hedgehog was an anti-submarine weapon developed by the Royal Navy during World War II, that was deployed on convoy escort warships such as destroyers to supplement the depth charge. The weapon worked by firing a number of small spigot mortar bombs from spiked fittings. Rather than working on a time or depth fuse like depth charges, the bombs exploded on contact and achieved a higher sinking rate against submarines than depth charges did.
Hedgehog received its name because when unloaded, the rows of empty spigots resembled the spines of a hedgehog.
Hedgehog, also known as an Anti-Submarine Projector was developed by the Directorate of Miscellaneous Weapons Development and entered service in 1943.
Hedgehog was replaced by the more effective Squid mortar in 1943 and this in turn was replaced by the three-barreled Limbo. The United States produced a similar weapon called Mousetrap.
The Hedgehog was adapted into a 7 shot launcher form for use on the back of the Matilda tank serving with Australian forces.
From 1949 a copy of Hedgehog was produced in the USSR as MBU-200, developed in 1956 into MBU-600 with enhanced range of 600 m.
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Technically the weapon was what is called a \'spigot-mortar\' or spigot discharger, a type of weapon invented by Lt-Col Blacker, RA. That is the propelling charge was part of the main weapon and worked against a rod (the spigot) set in the baseplate which fitted inside a tubular tail of the \'bomb\'. The alternative is the common infantry trench-mortar which is basically a tube and the bomb is dropped down inside the tube firing the propelling charge when it hits bottom.
The weapon fires a salvo of 24 bombs in an arc, aimed to land in a circular or elliptical area about 100 feet (30 m) in diameter at a fixed point about 250 yards (230 m) directly ahead of the attacking ship. The mounting initially was fixed but was later replaced by a gyro-stablised one to allow for the rolling and pitching of the attacking ship.
The launcher was 4 "cradles" each of 6 launcher spigots. The firing sequence was staggered so that all the bombs would land at roughly the same time. This had the added advantage of minimising the stress on the weapon\'s mounting, so that deck re-inforcement was not needed, and the weapon could easily be retro-fitted to any convenient place on a ship. Reloading took about 3 minutes.
The Hedgehog had four key advantages over the depth charge:
However the Hedgehog did not have the advantage of any cumulative damage effect of repeated explosions just outside the lethal distance that could make it harder for the target to dodge later attacks or force it to return to base for repairs when it did escape.
The Hedgehog was much more successful than depth-charge attacks eventually (the best kill rate was about 25% of attacks whereas depth-charge attacks never got better than 7%). It initially had a very poor record although many of the factors had nothing to do with the design of the weapon.
For a single bomb
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